Rapid evolution of virus sequences in intrinsically disordered protein regions.

Nodamura Virus (NoV) is a nodavirus originally isolated from insects that can replicate in a wide variety of hosts, including mammals. Because of their simplicity and ability to replicate in many diverse hosts, NoV, and the Nodaviridae in general, provide a unique window into the evolution of viruse...

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Main Authors: Leonid Gitlin, Tzachi Hagai, Anthony LaBarbera, Mark Solovey, Raul Andino
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-12-01
Series:PLoS Pathogens
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4263755?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-8381ff80a0d34cbaba021e40d45627512020-11-24T22:08:50ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS Pathogens1553-73661553-73742014-12-011012e100452910.1371/journal.ppat.1004529Rapid evolution of virus sequences in intrinsically disordered protein regions.Leonid GitlinTzachi HagaiAnthony LaBarberaMark SoloveyRaul AndinoNodamura Virus (NoV) is a nodavirus originally isolated from insects that can replicate in a wide variety of hosts, including mammals. Because of their simplicity and ability to replicate in many diverse hosts, NoV, and the Nodaviridae in general, provide a unique window into the evolution of viruses and host-virus interactions. Here we show that the C-terminus of the viral polymerase exhibits extreme structural and evolutionary flexibility. Indeed, fewer than 10 positively charged residues from the 110 amino acid-long C-terminal region of protein A are required to support RNA1 replication. Strikingly, this region can be replaced by completely unrelated protein sequences, yet still produce a functional replicase. Structure predictions, as well as evolutionary and mutational analyses, indicate that the C-terminal region is structurally disordered and evolves faster than the rest of the viral proteome. Thus, the function of an intrinsically unstructured protein region can be independent of most of its primary sequence, conferring both functional robustness and sequence plasticity on the protein. Our results provide an experimental explanation for rapid evolution of unstructured regions, which enables an effective exploration of the sequence space, and likely function space, available to the virus.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4263755?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Leonid Gitlin
Tzachi Hagai
Anthony LaBarbera
Mark Solovey
Raul Andino
spellingShingle Leonid Gitlin
Tzachi Hagai
Anthony LaBarbera
Mark Solovey
Raul Andino
Rapid evolution of virus sequences in intrinsically disordered protein regions.
PLoS Pathogens
author_facet Leonid Gitlin
Tzachi Hagai
Anthony LaBarbera
Mark Solovey
Raul Andino
author_sort Leonid Gitlin
title Rapid evolution of virus sequences in intrinsically disordered protein regions.
title_short Rapid evolution of virus sequences in intrinsically disordered protein regions.
title_full Rapid evolution of virus sequences in intrinsically disordered protein regions.
title_fullStr Rapid evolution of virus sequences in intrinsically disordered protein regions.
title_full_unstemmed Rapid evolution of virus sequences in intrinsically disordered protein regions.
title_sort rapid evolution of virus sequences in intrinsically disordered protein regions.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS Pathogens
issn 1553-7366
1553-7374
publishDate 2014-12-01
description Nodamura Virus (NoV) is a nodavirus originally isolated from insects that can replicate in a wide variety of hosts, including mammals. Because of their simplicity and ability to replicate in many diverse hosts, NoV, and the Nodaviridae in general, provide a unique window into the evolution of viruses and host-virus interactions. Here we show that the C-terminus of the viral polymerase exhibits extreme structural and evolutionary flexibility. Indeed, fewer than 10 positively charged residues from the 110 amino acid-long C-terminal region of protein A are required to support RNA1 replication. Strikingly, this region can be replaced by completely unrelated protein sequences, yet still produce a functional replicase. Structure predictions, as well as evolutionary and mutational analyses, indicate that the C-terminal region is structurally disordered and evolves faster than the rest of the viral proteome. Thus, the function of an intrinsically unstructured protein region can be independent of most of its primary sequence, conferring both functional robustness and sequence plasticity on the protein. Our results provide an experimental explanation for rapid evolution of unstructured regions, which enables an effective exploration of the sequence space, and likely function space, available to the virus.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4263755?pdf=render
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